228 F. 844 | 6th Cir. | 1915
The appellee filed a hill in equity in one of the state courts in Michigan, making the Ingersoll Company defendant, and alleging that Mr. Crocker, as vendor, had made in 1898 an executory contract of sale to the Ingersoll Company, as vendee, covering part of block 1, Dickinson’s addition to.tire city of Mt. Clemens; that the vendee had failed to perform the conditions and thereupon the vendor had forfeited the contract and re-entered; that the contract had been placed upon record and constituted a cloud on vendor’s title. The bill prayed that this cloud might be removed and the vendee enjoined from interfering with vendor’s possession. The Ingersoll Company removed the case to the court below, in which, after some interlocutory proceedings, the company answered, claiming that the vendor’s title proved to be bad, and that defendant had therefore been justified in refusing to pay the remainder of the price. The answer also set up that, before the bill in equity was filed, the Ingersoll Company, as plaintiff, had begun a case at law in the court below against Mr. Crocker to recover damages because he had been unable to make a
The meritorious questions involved are two: (1) Was Mr. Crocker’s title good enough, so that his deed would have satisfied his agreement to convey a “good and sufficient title”? (2) Should the question of title and the dependent question of who broke the contract have been left to the law case for determination? Although we conclude, for reasons hereafter stated, that the second question should be answered in the affirmative, yet, since the court of equity had some measure of jurisdiction, and the legal questions have been fully argued, and sending the subject-matter back to be tried at law would only result in bringing the same questions here again, we think it proper on this appeal to consider those matters which have been thus presented, and which, clearly, must upon the further trial be treated as questions of law.
“It is made an express condition of this conveyance that said premises shall never be occupied or used by or in any trade or business such as if launched or started in localities in cities already thickly populated and devoted to first-class residences are held to be nuisances;' and upon violation of this condition, the said premises, and the title thereof, with all improvements thereon, shall revert to party of the first part, their heirs, representatives and assigns.”
No one doubts the prima facie validity of this stipulation, or that it would at once be effective as a condition subsequent, a breach of which would give the right of re-entry; and obviously such a condition would affect the title in the hands of all subsequent grantees, without regard to whether the condition was repeated in the deeds in the intervening chain of title. Blanchard v. R. R., 31 Mich. 43, 18 Am. Rep. 142; Batley v. Foerderer, 162 Pa. 460, 29 Atl. 868. The Michigan decisions adopt the general rule that a title is not marketable, if there is any outstanding incumbrance or claim — and a condition subsequent is an incumbrance — which would make a purchaser of ordinary business prudence unwilling to accept the title. Allen v. Atkinson, 21 Mich. 351, 361; Barnard v. Brown, supra. Clearly, this condition in this deed creates an apparent or prima facie incumbrance which seems to malee the title nonmarketable; and we come to a consideration of the special reasons why the condition is thought either never to have been, or to have ceased to be, thus operative.
It might be argued that restrictions intended to maintain a high-class residential neighborhood would increase rather than diminish the value of the property so long as the neighborhood maintained that character, and hence that such a restriction would not injuriously affect the marketability of the title; but even that argument will not reach the present case. It appears without dispute that this district did not develop as was planned; that the residences built thereon were of a medium class; that for many years a factory, coal and lumber yard, boarding houses, and places of public entertainment had been maintained on block i, or within the district covered by restrictions like that in this deed, and that just outside the district and closely adjacent to this parcel were large factories of different kinds. It is not to be doubted that, when the Crocker-Ingersoll contract was made, block 1 was better adapted to business purposes than to first-class residences; and this is emphasized by the fact that Ingersoll contracted to purchase the property for the purpose of building upon it a roller coaster or switchback railroad, and using it as a public amusement park. This, certainly, would not be, by law, a nuisance if in a suitable location; it surely — or at least probably — would be, among “first-class residences.” If the restrictive condition was in force, it is clear enough that the property could not be appropriated to the lawful use which the purchaser intended, and hence that the condition was an incumbrance which made the title insufficient.
By these deeds, the adjacent and nearby lot owners acquired rights to benefits from the condition imposed upon block 1. It is quite clear under.the two Smith-Barrie Cases not only that the condition, when imposed, was substantial, not nominal, but also that conveyances of the adjoining land as described did not change the character of the •condition and render it “merely nominal.”
8. It is said that the condition has been waived and abandoned by everybody concerned. This contention is based on the fact that in 1894 outlot 3 was subdivided into lots, and in 1895 a large part of the original addition remaining unsold was partitioned by Mr. Dickinson among the owners, for whom he was trustee, and that after these dates this restriction was omitted from all further deeds made by the proprietors of the original addition or of lot 3. We infer that, at the time of the partition, there remained unsold about 124 of the small lots on the original addition, and that, as these were afterwards sold by the proprietors who had succeeded Mr. Dickinson, no condition was imposed. Further, considerable portions of the property sold under restriction had been used for years for purposes which might be considered forbidden by the condition, and no lot owner had ever made any objection'. Upon this question of abandonment and waiver, as upon that of adverse possession, we think no decision should now be made. The proofs have by no means been exhausted, and the questions are proper for decision in the suit at law. We do not intend to intimate that each of these two questions may not now be upon this record, and may not turn out to be upon the final record, one of law and not of fact.
Several other points are made against the effectiveness of the condition to .constitute an incumbrance, but we think the others do not require discussion. It cannot be important whether the Ingersoll Company was really anxious to carry out the contract, if in fact the title was one which it was not bound to' accept.
The Ingersoll Company relied upon another supposed defect in the title: It appeared that the city of Mt. Clemens had once received a grant óf a right to lay water pipes across block 1, and this right never was formally released by the city until after the status of the parties hereto was fixed by the forfeiture and its acceptance. Whether this apparently outstanding right was really a burden or a benefit, whether it had been in fact abandoned by the city, and whether the benefit or the abandonment was clear enough to make unsubstantial any complaint based on this objection, are questions for die suit at law.
The decree below is reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.
“When any conditions annexed to a grant or conveyance of land are merely nominal and evince no intention of actual and substantial benefit to the party to wliom or in whose favor they are to be performed, they may be wholly disregarded ; and a failure to perform the same .shall in no case operate as a forfeiture of the land conveyed subject thereto.”